The Radio Boys in the Thousand Islands eBook

“I don’t know whether they do or not.
I didn’t hear them say anything about that.”

“Where are they now?”

“Over near our fishing place, if they haven’t
left. They were hidden in some bushes, and I
might ’ave run right into them if it hadn’t
been for their voices. After I heard them I kept
myself under cover and crept closer till I could get
what they said.”

“Were you listening to them all the time you
were gone?”

“Just about.”

“And didn’t you find out anything more
specific than what you’ve told me?”

“No, I don’t think I did.”

“Why did you leave them?”

“They seemed to ’ve talked the subject
dry and turned to other matters, and I thought I’d
better come and tell you about it.”

“And they’re there yet?”

“So far as I know.”

“After they’d talked their subject dry,
what did they find to discuss?” asked Hal.

“Something wet,” Bud answered with a grin.

“I get you; you mean they had some moonshine
with them.”

“Or some Canadian whisky.”

“Probably that. But this makes the situation
look a little better for us. If they’re
just a bunch of fellows out for a liquor outing, maybe
we don’t need to be much concerned about them
if we keep shy of them.”

“I don’t think that’s all there
is to it,” Bud replied, with a note of warning
in his voice. “I heard one of them say we
were likely to make trouble for them and we ought
to be chased away and scared so badly we’d never
come around here again, and the others seemed to agree
with him.”

“If he did, he’d probably make another
pun about sines and cosines. But, say, don’t
you think we’d better make further investigation?”

“I don’t know what we could do unless
we did some more eavesdropping, and that might cause
them to get ugly if they caught us in the act,”
Bud reasoned.

“Yes,” Hal agreed; “I suppose we’d
better wait as quietly as we can till Mr. Perry and
Cub get back; then we can decide better what to do.”

“I don’t see that there’s anything
for us to do but get away from here as soon as possible,”
said Bud. “Mr. Perry won’t want to
get into trouble with four men.”

“He’ll probably have a talk with them
to find out what’s on their minds,” was
Hal’s conclusion.

“And then get out rather than have a fight,”
Bud added.

“Oh, I hope there won’t be anything as
bad as that.”

“Why not, if we insist on staying? If these
fellows are the rough characters we suspect them of
being, that’s the very sort of thing they’d
resort to, provided, of course, that they thought they
could get the best of us.”

“Here they come now!” suddenly gasped
Hal, indicating, with his gaze, the direction from
which “they” were approaching.